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June 7, 2005

A few weeks ago, I stumbled upon Planet Cincinnati, a listing of several Cincinnati blogs, similar to our own Planet Xavier. The blogs that it syndicates probably aren’t of much interest to you, but it’s nice to know that we’re not alone.

Yesterday, Brad sent me an e-mail telling me about an online forum for St. X students, not surprisingly named the St. Xavier Forums. Clearly we bloggers aren’t the only ones trying to start up a community. Those of you who paid attention to recent discussion here will wonder how they’ve survived this long, even though the administration apparently knows about them. Behold the power of the disclaimer.

For now, I’m still sticking to my position that a forum is for the “creatively challenged,” if its mission is just to talk about “stuff,” rather than to actually do something. You’ll note that forums like mozillaZine Forums (collaborate to make Mozilla better and help new users) and Slashdot (report the news, no matter how trivial) are successes, whereas ones with similar ambitions, such as CzekTech Forums (“talk about what we think is cool”)… well, they haven’t fared quite as well.

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That said, the St. X Forums look promising, because it’s run by someone who seems to actually care, and because it could actually be useful: if the community grows enough (likely through word of mouth), it could become the premier place to find out what’s going on. Or pX could. It doesn’t really seem like we’re going to be competitors, anyhow; more like complements: the forums will probably be a lot less formal than pX, as hard as that is to imagine. For now, at least, we’re only advertising off of each other. But it would be great to see some kind of cooperation develop.

Any ideas?

January 20, 2005

Harrison finally jumped on the bandwagon and got a blog! He took my advice and got a Blogger blog, and for that I am doubly grateful. He calls it the HMS TARDIS, referencing his two greatest obsessions: the Crown, and 1950s-style British police callboxes.

Let’s commemorate blog number 99 at pX!

Right now his link at pX points nowhere, strangely enough. Is that some kind of reference to the TARDIS that I’m unaware of?

In case anyone’s interested: his older brother, James Sand, is a St. X grad and has his own LiveJournal as well.

January 15, 2005

Peter Rother just redesigned his website/weblog (formerly bromidic deviation), and it’s looking slick. Except for one thing: when I viewed it yesterday, the calendar on his front page displayed the month of “January, 2005.” Ignoring the comma, there was one little error: the days that the calendar displayed ranged from January -5th to January 26th. Yes, that was a negative sign.

The issue’s since been fixed, despite my pleas to keep this hilarious bug – it’s one of those little quirks that could become The Next Big Thing™ in Web design.

Anyhow, kudos to Peter to his ongoing commitment to home-brewing his own CMS (blogging software), and setting it all up on his own server.

And Peter, is the check in the mail? Haven’t gotten the $2 for my mad troubleshooting skills yet… :^P


  1. Not alone
  2. All aboard!
  3. Negative five
  4. My notes, now encoded
  5. Hail to the Chief
  6. Aggregate and exaggerate
  7. Está abierta… de veras
  8. Está abierta… en cierto modo
  9. My notes, now Live
  10. Oh, the evaporation!
  11. Blogrolling
  12. Bromidic
  13. A little blogrolling
  14. Reviewing Tech
  15. And there is much rejoicing
  16. Yum
  17. Links
  18. Another Site?
  19. The Weather
  20. joehewitt.com
  21. Warning
  22. Shameless Plug
  23. Prospective Blogger?
  24. Ratings
  25. Hidden stuff
  26. Mike’s Links
  27. Welcome